100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 23, 1998 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1998-03-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

,,2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 23, 1998

NATION! WORLD

I

HOLOCAUST
Continued from Page 1A
crowds.
Ullman said her grandmother's
message of optimism is particularly
,relevant to students today. When
,people ask Klein how she perse-
vered against hopeless odds, she
.simply notes that in her camp of
thousands of girls, there were no
suicides.
She attributed this to "the spirit of
young people to prefer life, always
life, in preference to death ... the

darker the night, the brighter the
dawn."
This year's Conference on the
Holocaust will continue o1
Thursday with the Memorial of
Names, a continuous 24-hour read-
ing of the names of Holocaust vic-
tims.
Other events part of the
Conference on the Holocaust
include a panel discussion about
hate speech on the Internet, several
speeches by scholars and authors
and a showing of the film "Border
Street."

MSA
Continued from Page 1A
possible $4.50 and $5 raise. Bram
Elias, co-chair of the Student Regent
Task Force, said he was extremely
pleased with the results of the elections.
"The results are wonderful," Elias
said. "I think the students have told

MSA they want a student regent and
they don't want MSA to waste money."
LSA first-year student Vikram
Sarma, a newly elected MSA represen-
tative, said his victory was a "bitter-
sweet moment" because of Friedrichs
and Garcia's loss. His major goal will
be to concentrate MSA's attention on
getting the job done.

AROUND THE NATION

MSA Winter 1998 Representative Elections:

LSA (Top nine vote-getters):

Vikram Sarma (Ind.)
Surneet Karnik (Ind.)
Mehul Madia (MP)
Ellen Friedman (SP)
Heidi Lubin (Ind.)
Erin Carey (SP)
Peter Handler (SP)
Mark Sherer (SP)
Damian~ de Goa (SP)

4482
4045
3444
3443
3383
3289
3218
3107
2999

Aaron Flagg (SP)
Douglas Friedman (NFP)
Art

121
97

M
I
i
i
I

Don'*t PanuiicI!1
If you think you're pregnant...
call us--we listen, we care.
PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP
975-4357
Any time, arty day, 24 hours.
Fully confidential.
Serving Students since 1970.

Ksenija Savic (SP) uncontested;
Architecture
Nathan Tracer (Ind.) uncontested
Pharmacy
Matt Curin (SP) uncontested
Law (top vote getter)
Neeraj Verma (Ind.) 31
Medicine (top vote getter)
Avninder Dhaliwal (Ind.) 54
Nursing
Mike Bates (Ind.) uncontested
SNRE
Sam Ellis (Ind.) uncontested

Willey confronted Clinton after pass
WASHINGTON - Eleven days after President Clinton allegedly made a crude
sexual advance, Kathleen Willey returned alone to the Oval Office at his request
and told the president she "wanted that to be over with," according to previously
sealed testimony.
In a sworn deposition taken Jan. 11, Willey recounted her Dec. 10, 1993, ret
visit as she pleaded anew for a better job. It was her first day back at the White
House after her husband committed suicide.
At the time, she was a volunteerand wanted a paying job to offset financial
problems at home.
She alleges that in the first meeting, on Nov. 29, the president made an unwant-
ed sexual advance.
Willey said she told Clinton in the return visit that "I was in a very desperate sit-
uation and that I still needed to work there."
Willey was asked by lawyers for Paula Jones in her sexual harassment case
against the president whether Willey ever sought to address with Clinton her con-
cerns about the Nov. 29 advance.
"I think that when I went back my first day of work ... I think I may have ma
a reference to that. ... I don't know how I said it, but basically said I just wanted

Engineering (Top two vote-getters):
Jon Malkovich (Ind.) 774
Sandeep Parikh (MP) 356
Rackham (Top four vote-getters):
Carol Scarlett (DAA) 130
Olga Savic (SP) 130

4,I.

L.SA-SG President and Vice President Elect
Geeta Ehatia and Gregg Lanier (SP)
Nitm
k
A' s
lOutstanding...Four Svtarsl-
AI have the advantage of --The Detroit News and
plete CPA review on theTF
vant, download up-to-date The Detroit Free rress
al CPA exams-24 hours a a
g review books, software, One of
:o our CPA faculty. So get MichIgan's Top Ten!"
--Tle Zagat Gide
Jew course and 20%o OFF
$1 OO..
WITH STUDENT ID
MONDAYS!
Modern American Cooking
'Students must enroll in 33Dtot5
Kaplan's $799 CPA Review 303 Petroit St
course to take advantage (Next to The Farmer's Mkt)
of this offer.
313.665.0700

that to be over with," she testified.
Cuban baseball
coach, players defect
MIAMI - Four Cuban baseball
players and a coach who defected
from the communist island more
than a week ago were rescued at sea
and taken to a small Bahamian
island, a baseball agent said
Saturday.
The crew of a fishing vessel plucked
them out of their rickety boat Friday
afternoon and turned them over
Saturday to Bahamian officials, said
Joe Cubas, an agent who has helped
several Cuban baseball players flee the
island.
"Right now we're very tired," pitch-
ing coach Enrique Chinea said in a tele-
phone interview with Worldwide
Television News that was broadcast on
WPLG-TV in Miami. "We're worn out
physically and mentally."
Cubas said the four players, the
coach and four other Cubans on the
boat were rescued and taken to
Ragged Island, one of the southern-
most Bahamian islands and located

about 80 miles off the north coast of
Cuba.
"They're all in very good condi-
tion," Cubas said.
Landlord held liabl
mn rape of student
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - A federal
court jury says a former Purdue
University student from suburban
Detroit is due $245,000 from her
former landlords because her unsafe
dwelling contributed to her rape.
The woman from Farmington,
Mich., was alone in her apartment
on the first floor of a converti
older house in West Lafayette when
an intruder armed with a knife
attacked her while she slept early on
Oct. 7, 1995.
The woman, now 24 and working
as a geologist, continues to suffer
from symptoms of post-traumatic
stress disorder from the assault, said
to a psychiatrist who testified at a
six-day trial in U.S. District Court
South Bend.

AROUND THE WORLD

I.I

Makeup -our

-Future

Israel calls peace
plan 'unacceptable'
JERUSALEM - Israel took a hard
line yesterday against a new U.S. effort
to restart the stalled peace talks with
the Palestinians, describing as "unac-
ceptable" the U.S., proposal that Israel
withdraw from an additional 13 per-
cent of the West Bank within three
months.
The government of Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu also declared in a
statement after yesterday's Cabinet
meeting that Israel "expects the United
States to adhere" to earlier promises
that Israel alone will determine the
scope of its pullouts from the West
Bank. "Reports of a 13 percent with-
drawal are unacceptable,' the statement
said.
The strong words, along with two
recent phone conversations between
Netanyahu and President Clinton and a
flurry of emissaries from Jerusalem to
Washington, were aimed at trying to
keep the United States from going pub-
lic with its ideas on how to break a
yearlong deadlock in Israeli-

Palestinian peacemaking.
Late yesterday, the U.S. Embassy in
Tel Aviv confirmed that envoy Denn
Ross will return to the region at the
of the week for what political analysts
predicted could be a final effort to per-
suade Israel and the Palestinians to
make progress on peace before the
United States offers its own plan.
Nigerians crowd to
see Pope John Paul II
OBA, Nigeria - Perhaps a
lion Nigerians jammed onto a dusty
plain at this village yesterday to see
Pope John Paul II and applaud his
call for an end to corrupt, authoritar-
ian military rule in Africa's most
populous nation.
In heat that reached nearly 100
degrees, Nigerians walked, biked, and
traveled in packed buses along clogged
roads to a vast expanse of rust-colored
earth in this village outside the souA
ern city of Onitsha. Othiers had arriv
the night before to camp out.
- Compiled from Daily wire reports.

Cliniques Beauty Readings Workshops.

The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by,
students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are
$85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. Orncampus sub
scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid.
The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press.
ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327.
PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336: Opinion 764-0552;
Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550.
E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/.
NEWS Janet Adamy, Managing Editor
EDITORS: Maria Hackett, Heather Kamins, Jeffrey Kosseff, Chris Metinko.
STAFF: Meissa Andrzejak. Reilly Brennan, Jodi S. Cohen. Gerard Coherwrignaud. Greg Cox, Rachel Edelman, Jeff Eldridge, Margene
Eriksen, Megan Exley, Erin Holmes, Steve Horwitz. Hong Lin. Pete Meyers, William Nash, Christine M. Paik, Lee Palmer, Katie Plona. Susan
T. Port. Dia Rab, Eliana Raik. Anupama Reddy, Peter Romer-Friedman, Josh Rosenblatt, Melanie Sampson, Nika Schulte. Carly Southworth.
Mike Spann, Sam Stavis, Jason Stoffer. Carissa Van Heest, Will Weissert, Heather Wiggin, Kristin Wright, Jennifer Yachnin.
CALENDAR: Katie Plona.
EDITORIAL Jack Schiflaci, Ed
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Lockyer.
STAFF: Lea Frost, Kaamran Hafeez, Eric Hochstadt. Scott Hunter, Jason Korb, Yuki Kuniyuki. Sarah Lemire, Erin Marsh. James Miller, Aaron
Rich, Joshua Rich, Stephen Sarkozy, Megan Schimpf, Paul Serilla, David Wallace, Josh White, Matt Wimsatt
SPORTS Jim Rose, Managing Editor
EDITORS: Chris Farah, Sharat Raju, Mark Snyder, Dan Stillman.
STAFF: Drew Beaver. TJ. Berka, Josh Borkin, Evan Braunstein, Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Dave DenHerder, Chris Duprey. Jordan Field. Mark
Francescutti. Rick Freeman, John Friedberg. Alan Goldenbach. James Goldstein, Rick Harpster, Kim Hart, Josh Kleinbaum, Chad Kujala, Andy
Latack, John Leroi. Fred Link, B.J. Luria, Pranay Reddy. Kevin Rosenfield. Danielle Rumore. Tracy Sandier, Nita Srivastava, Uma
Subramanian, Jacob Wheeler.
ARTS Bryan Lark, Kristin Long, Editors
WEEKEND. ETC. EDITORS: Emily Lambert, Elizabeth Lucas; Associate Editor: Christopher Tkaczyk
SUB-EDITORS: Brian Cohen (Music), Stephanie Love (Campus Arts). Joshua Pederson {Film Jessica Eaton (Books Michael Galloway (TV/New Media).
STAFF: Joanne Ainajjar. Amy Barber, Matthew Barrett, Colin Bartos, Caryn But, Anitha Chalam, Gabe Fajuri, Laura Flyer, Geordy
Gantsoudes, Cait Hall, Marquina Iliev, Stephanie Jo Klein, Anna Kovalszki, James Miller, Rob Mitchum. Kern Murphy, Jennifer Petlinski,
Ryan Posly, Aaron Rennie, Aaron Rich, Joshua Rich, Deveron Q. Sanders, Erin Diane Schwartz, Anders Smith-Lindall, Cara Spindler,
Prashant Tamaskar, Ted Watts, Curtis Zimmerman.
PHOTO Margaret Myers, Warren Zinn, Editor$
STAFF: Allison Canter, Louis Brown, Mallory SE. Floyd. Joy Jacobs. Jessica Johnson, John Kraft, Dana Linnane, Emily Nathan, Nathan Ruffer, Sara ,
Stillman, Paul Talanian, Adnana Yugovich.
ONLINE Chris Farah, Edito*
STAFF: Mark Francescutti, Marquina Iiev, Elizabeth Lucas, Adam Pollock.
GRAPHICS Jonathan Weitz, Editor
STAFF: AlexHogg, Michelle McCombs.,Jordan Young.

Clinicue sees great looks in your future.

; i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan